First of all, O-M-G, You better be prepared to put this together!!! It took 9 hours, no breaks... there were 2 of us and sometimes 3, to hold all of the pieces while drilling at the same time! If you can afford to pay a couple of guys (who assemble things regularly), I would HIGHLY recommend that! We're used to putting IKEA, Walmart and Amazon DIY things together, but THIS was the MOST DIFFICULT thing (by far) we've EVER put together!!! Here's why: the worst of it are the screws, they are SO TINY (all 3 different ones that go in all places) that they REALLY play "heck" on your fine motor skills, so you end up dropping them (A Lot) and have a really hard time holding them while trying to drill them in, No Joke! And then you have to wonder, because they're So Small, are they gonna hold this whole thing together and hold the door on for the long haul... like, for a year or years to come??? Then they send a pair of gloves in the pkg of tools for a reason (but only 1 pair), so someone else, who may be helping, is at risk of getting cut by the steel edges... I learned that first hand! Was cut several times by the steel edges, very fine, SHARP edges! So have a 2nd pair of garden gloves or something similar for the other person on the hand that's Not holding the screws... Then, the steel panels are very wobbly/flimsy and thin (of course because the whole unit is not expensive and total weight is 74 lbs) so when you're standing them up and trying to drill in the bottoms and sides together with these tiny screws and drill them to each other and need 2-3 people to hold them while you're trying to also put these tiny screws through 2-3 sheets of steel and/or the frame or L bracket, it's VERY frustrating because you don't have a lot to work with and someone ends up holding up the panels or the bars around the top (which is the frame) for a long time which is grueling and tiresome! So, we did use the instructions and the video to make sure we did everything but some things were still "fuzzy"... like the bars on the inside of the doors, I took 2 pictures of them because the top one is put on correctly, but the bottom one is not, it does not line up with the holes in the middle... but nothing on the bar indicates top or bottom, you just need to make sure all of your holes line up. Then ALL of the roof panels hang over the edge of the shed, especially in back (by about 3-4 inches)... so again, you really need to look at your drill holes, because the directions or video doesn't do a good job of letting you know this. And then, of course, there's no floor, if you were wondering... so it's best not to put it on your lawn, unless you want to build a floor for it... we put it under our car port. So after all is said and done, I must say, it was still a good value for our money and it came out feeling really sturdy, not wobbly, the corners line up, the locking mechanism, lines up, the door lines up and feels sturdy enough and it was light enough to move into place! I ordered some metal glue that I'm gonna put on each screw, just because they're so small and I don't trust them to stay in place for the long haul, but you can do as you see fit! For now, it looks like it's gonna meet our needs and because it's way back, under the car port, it's away from the rain and most of the outdoor elements here in Florida.I have completed my fair share of projects. I felt that this shed was easy to build. It’s helpful to have an extra set on hands in the beginning. But I built this with very little help in around 3 hours. The screws the shed comes with arnt great. I’d recommend adding some 1 inch self drilling screws in certain areas. The instructions are fine. If you’re used to building and working projects then you’ll configure the instructions very quickly. I built this on our turf then got help lifting it into place across the yard. Sturdy enough for my needs.Definitely a good shed for the money, but every single piece was wrapped in shrink wrap and it was not easy to get off. My husband and his dad were putting together the shed and I was unwrapping all of the pieces (which I wouldn't recommend doing until you need the pieces because the sticker labels saying which piece is which is on the shrink wrap. So that was fun trying to figure out which pieces went where with no labels. It took us about 5 hours total. I spent the whole time unwrapping pieces as they were assembling them. So it was almost an all day project but still happy with the purchase. It's a little flimsy, but not horrible. We will see once we get our first monsoon. Hopefully it doesn't collapse.First, this is a metal shell, if you are expecting it to be as sturdy as a wood shed at 1/3 the price, you’re wrong. It took 8 hours for my dad and I to assemble the 8x6 shed. Each piece comes labeled and the instructions do an adequate job of telling you how to assemble. I do think the instructions could have been more descriptive to help speed up the process and take some guess work out, but we were able to assemble without any issues. The key, especially when you get to assembling the doors, is at the start of the instructions they tell you the big hole always covers the small hole.I highly recommend a wood platform base. I chose those shed because it came with an anchor kit for the base. However, this just provides 1 screw hole for each corner. However, the anchor kit has a lip where you can attach a wood shim over top to increase how secure the shed is to the base. There are holes where the side panels connect. I recommend running a 2x4 each spot there is a connector hole in the middle to ensure the shed can withstand wind and the elements. No one wants to spend $500 and 8 hours constructing to have it destroyed with one bad wind storm.Also, the door handle is just enough to keep the door closed. The handle is not bolted into the door frame, so even when locked the door handle just spins. I bought an $18 t lock replacement to fix this problem. If you keep anything that can be used to break into your house in your shed, basically any yard tool, you need to keep it locked.Overall, this is a good affordable option for someone who is handy and able to make some minor additions/modifications.The shed arrived intact in one flat pack box. I'm very experienced in construction, and usually can work my way through issues no problem. The instructions for this though are abysmal. Some of the pictures are confusing, making it difficult to know exactly what part goes where and which way. You definitely need 2 people to get it done. My girlfriend was plenty of help. 4 hours later it was bolted to the patio and doing it's job of holding yard care stuff. It actually looks great, but I personally added some extra bracing in the corners to give it a bit more regidity. Bottom line, for the money I'm satisfied.It's definitely a good shed. The only three drawbacks are this: TAKES TWO PEOPLE TO SETUP (one to hold and the other to drill), that's about 30 million screws, no floor you gotta build it. Other than that. Sturdy. Light weight. Simple to put together if you can follow pictures. The parts are all labeled. Comes with a pair of courtesy gloves and a screwdriver.